Saving Your Pennies: The Increasing Influence of Low-Priced Stocks in U.S. Markets;

Discussion in 'Wall St. News' started by ajacobson, Jan 26, 2024.

  1. ajacobson

    ajacobson

    Saving Your Pennies: The Increasing Influence of Low-Priced Stocks in U.S. Markets; A closer look at how penny stocks are reshaping Wall Street's landscape; A curious trend
    John Ramsay, Chief Market Policy Officer - IEX
    Something strange has been happening in the U.S. stock market over the last year, and that something is exemplified by the case of Bit Brothers Limited, a Nasdaq issuer with the symbol "BETS". It may surprise you to know BETS was the most actively-traded stock, by share volume, during the last six months of the year. With a trading price of around one cent per share, BETS' volume ramped up especially in December - during the last week of the month, BETS averaged about two billion shares a day, or 19% of all listed stock volume. On December 27, 3.5 billion shares of BETS traded, amounting to 28% of total volume for that day.
    /jlne.ws/47QJecL
     
    redneckrick likes this.
  2. zdreg

    zdreg

    That is an interesting phenomena since there have been calls occasionally to eliminate the penny coin.
     
    Last edited: Jan 26, 2024
    murray t turtle likes this.
  3. I think those things trade in faction of a cent right? Like AHIX for example.

    Great article.
     
  4. Quanto

    Quanto

    Made possible by $0 commission.
     
    countryBoy641 likes this.
  5. Quanto

    Quanto

    Related article at the same location:
    https://www.iex.io/article/what-the-rise-in-subdollar-stock-volume-means-for-institutional-trading
    "
    RESEARCH / Sep 28, 2023
    What the Rise in Subdollar Stock Volume Means for Institutional Trading

    [...]
    Historically, trading in subdollar symbols was limited to 4-5% of market volume. In the past year, that’s risen to new all-time highs above 15% and stayed consistently in the double digits.

    While that still may feel irrelevant in terms of notional volume, in terms of shares traded, it’s become a significant trend.

    The Rise in Subdollar Stocks
    For starters, there are many more publicly traded stocks <$1 than there used to be.

    When a stock goes public, it typically must do so at a share price of at least $4. That means to be an exchange-listed subdollar stock, the stock price must have fallen more than 75% from its IPO price.

    In 2022, with inflation and rising interest rates, the market fell substantially, with certain sectors being hit particularly hard and hundreds of stocks falling 75% or more in under a year, thus producing a lot of subdollar stocks.

    Though stocks that continue trading under $1 typically become de-listed after a period, there are currently many symbols under $1 that are still part of the National Market System. The number of publicly traded subdollar symbols went from fewer than 100 in 2021 H1 to over 700 in recent months.

    [...]

    "
     
    Last edited: Jan 27, 2024
  6. maxinger

    maxinger

    I thought I read the title as

    Saving Your Pennis
     
  7. zdreg

    zdreg

    Why don't you start a thread in Risk Management with that title?
     
  8. tomkat22

    tomkat22

    No you're thinking of the war movie "Saving Ryan's Privates".